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Weather helps firefighters get control of wildfire

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image A wildfire in the Santa Cruz Mountains is causing mandatory evacuations for neighboring homes.

Easing winds and lower temperatures helped keep the blaze from spreading and fire crews had the blaze mostly contained early Monday, ac

Easing winds and lower temperatures helped keep the blaze from spreading and fire crews had the blaze mostly contained early Monday, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Prevention.

"It's really not moving at all," said David Coursey, a department spokesman.

The 6-square-mile fire was expected to be fully surrounded by Tuesday, fire officials said. The blaze still threatened 550 homes and 20 commercial buildings.

While some evacuees were let in on an hour-by-hour basis to survey the damage, hundreds of residents were told to stay away following the outbreak of the fire in the mountainous region about 15 miles south of San Jose.

Five firefighters have suffered minor injuries.

In a community meeting at a church Sunday afternoon, residents eager to sleep in their own beds were given bad news. Officials said a quick turn in weather could re-ignite the blaze, and that they would have to wait until Tuesday to return home.

Meanwhile, nearly 3,000 personnel worked to cut fire lines through centuries-old redwood forests as a swarm of helicopters and air tankers doused flames from the sky.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency for Santa Cruz and Santa Clara counties to allow access to state funds. The firefighting effort has cost $6.1 million so far, Coursey said.

Smoke from the wildfire has left a haze over the San Francisco Bay area that was expected to linger through the Memorial Day weekend.

Investigators are still probing the cause of the fire, which broke out just as the state's unofficial fire season got under way in mid-May. The blaze erupted following the state's driest two-month period on record. 

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (7 posted):

Marcelo on 21/03/2012 16:04:29
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My girlfriend and I just iievtsd the CDC Museum and it was a lot of fun. Much to our disappointment, this building was not there. I knew I should have googled it before we left. Doh!But anyway, it was a lot of fun and very informative. Do note, if you do go take a good look at the CDC website and their visiting hours. Maybe a call to followup just to be sure will help. They were closed the first time we showed up due to their remodeling but even the security guard didn't have the right dates.
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vyzinlh on 22/03/2012 09:11:27
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Buffy on 27/03/2012 15:07:12
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Paki, aunque con retraso, te comunico que todos los que lo solicist teis a trav s de los coemntarios est is admitidos/as

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Brandi on 07/04/2012 13:26:27
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Yah, it is strange. From what I gathered, this plant recycled wood and other paper products...so, the spread of the fire doesn't quite surprise me. Good call, by the way: This VMI plant was cited for dust violations in 2005. Hmm...paper, wood, dust, and chemicals all in a plant that may (or may not) be following regulations? Sounds like a recipe for disaster. I'd also like to know more about the men who were found by the plant last night. Were they VMI employees? Did they have anything to do with this explosion?M

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Idana on 08/04/2012 15:48:01
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Simple chemistry Michelle wood dust is a highly volatile substance that can and will burn at a very fast rate. Since an explosion is simply that high rate of burning taking place faster than the surroundings can allow it to expand...Kablooey! (pardon the use of technical terms) And once you get things up to a high enough temperature everything burns and it feeds itself. All it takes is a spark in the wrong place and sometimes not even that. See also spontaneous combustion.

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Aslan on 11/04/2012 09:35:31
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I work at the CDC now, and I had to laugh a few times when I saw how the CDC was portrayed. From the concept of being a sitting timebomb&#8230; LOL! &#8230;. to the primitive security cards&#8230;Like the CDC, who&#8217;s mission is the preservation of life and the prevention of injury and disease, would ever rig itself to detonate with a massive fireball right in the middle of downtown atlanta!!! LOL rigggghhhhtttt&#8230;.I guess it does make good TV, though!

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Caelyn on 22/04/2012 13:50:16
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I just watched that episode and was thinking that the CDC look similar, but was too far away when they showed the city skyline. I used to live about a mile from the CDC and a mile from downtown Atlanta. For those who are interested and don&#8217;t know, the CDC is very close to the city center and down the street from Emory&#8217;s main campus. It&#8217;s a little scary when you think about it.

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